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  1. Jan 17, 2020 · However, during the late 900s, a man by the name of Abul Muhammad ibn al-Hasan ibn al-Haytham, through his research paved the way for mankind to ultimately invent the camera. Ibn Haytham was a Muslim born in Basra, an Iraqi city located on the Shatt al-Arab, who spent most of his life in Cairo.

  2. Ibn al-Haytham used a camera obscura mainly to observe a partial solar eclipse. In his essay, Ibn al-Haytham writes that he observed the sickle-like shape of the sun at the time of an eclipse.

  3. Oct 6, 2021 · Ibn al Haytham built his own darkroom, which later came to be known as camera obscura. He studied the movement of light and experimented with lenses and mirrors. He tested reflection and refraction and concluded that light refracts when it moved through different materials.

  4. Ibn al-Haytham (born c. 965, Basra, Iraq—died c. 1040, Cairo, Egypt) was a mathematician and astronomer who made significant contributions to the principles of optics and the use of scientific experiments.

  5. Among his other achievements, Ibn al-Haytham described the pinhole camera and invented the camera obscura (a precursor to the modern camera), discovered Fermat's principle of least time and the law of inertia (known as Newton's first law of motion), discovered the concept of momentum (part of Newton's second law of motion), described the ...

  6. Born in Basra, Iraq, around the year 965, Al-Hasan Ibn al-Haytham, Latinised as Alhazen or Alhasen, was a pioneering scientific thinker who, from his observation of light entering a dark room,...

  7. This book explained how the human eye works and how we see objects, such as stars, that are very far away. After Ibn al-Haythams book was translated from Arabic into Latin around 1200 CE, it sparked a revolution in optics in Europe.

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